1 big thing: Howard Schultz knows some Dems are going to hate him

Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz tells Axios he's "unfazed" by the online trashing from Democrats who think that by running for president as an independent, he could split the anti-Trump vote and re-elect the president.

"I'm putting myself in a position that I know is going to create hate, anger, disenfranchisement from friends, from Democrats," Schultz said after last night's "60 Minutes" segment unveiling his plan to explore an independent bid.

"I'm concerned about one thing: Doing everything I can to help families who have been left behind, and to restore dignity and honor back in the Oval Office."

"I'm not considering this to win the Twitter primary," he continued. "I believe that lifelong Democrats and lifelong Republicans are looking for a home, and they're not spending hours and hours on Twitter."

Schultz's fellow billionaire, Mike Bloomberg, looked at running as an independent, but will run as a Democrat if he plunges in.

Howard Wolfson, a top Bloomberg adviser, tweeted after Schultz's appearance: "I have seen enough data over many years to know that anyone running for POTUS as an independent will split the anti-incumbent, anti-Trump vote."

"The stakes couldn’t be higher. We can not afford the risk of spoiler politics that result in Trump’s re-election."

A Schultz adviser tells me his team sees opportunity in "the most moderate population the country's ever had," with so many "disengaged and disenchanted."

In the latestGallup data, 39% of people see themselves as independents, 34% as Ds and 25% as Rs.

The adviser said research by the Schultz team shows a centrist independent would draw evenly from the Republican and Democratic nominees, and bring Trump down to a "statistical floor of 26-27-28 percent."

Schultz talks of "the level of toxicity, the level of revenge" in national politics. But when I asked about Democrats, he said: "I don't want to get into specific people."

When I asked Schultz for examples of conservative ideas he supports that liberals don't, he said: "I have been a loud voice with regard to the national debt and the deficit, going back to the years of President Obama."

Schultz said it's too early to talk about a running mate.

But when I asked him a Republican he admires, he said Purdue President Mitch Daniels, the former Indiana governor.

And when I asked him a CEO he admires, he singled out IBM's Ginni Rometty, who "defines authenticity."

Schultz plans to travel the country for the next three months. He'll appear on "The View" tomorrow — the publication date of "From the Ground Up," which he calls "part memoir, part blueprint for how to induce positive change."

He told me he'll decide by late spring or early summer.

He left open the possibility of self-financing his campaign, which leaves him in less of a rush than candidates who have to build a fundraising machine.

"I think I've got plenty of time," he said. "I'll gauge the level of interest in what I've come to believe over the last year — that a choice between Donald Trump and a far-left-leaning progressive Democrat provides a wide and large opportunity."

"With that fast start, Harris has stoked a perception that she is not just an elite candidate, but among the Democratic front-runners — a designation that is loaded with both upside and danger in this very early stage."

3. Polar vortex brings coldest weather in 20+ years

If you're 25 or younger and live within a large swath of the Midwest — from Minneapolis to Chicago — this week will feature the coldest temperatures of your life, Axios science editor Andrew Freedman writes.

The frigid outbreak, which has already begun in parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin, will be life-threatening and disruptive for tens of millions of people this week.

The National Weather Serviceis warning that wind chills will plunge to the lowest readings since the mid-1990s across the Upper Midwest.

Wind chills on Wednesday morning in parts of Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota are likely to approach the minus 50s°F to minus 60s°F.

Such conditions can cause frostbite in just minutes, and will likely force the cancellation of schools across the region.

5. Facebook plan: One messaging service to rule them all

Illustration: Lazaro Gamio/Axios

Facebook’s decision to unite the technical guts of its three giant messaging services could not only cement its dominance of instant messaging but also help fend off future break-up attempts by antitrust cops, Axios' Scott Rosenberg and David McCabe report.

Uniting the back-end technology that runs Instagram, Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp is more than just an engineering call.

It will bring together users of all three apps in a single network, database and community — enabling new features and opening the door to even more anticompetitive challenges, privacy troubles and social conflicts.

Zuckerberg's plan would also bolster Facebook's utility for its business customers, per Axios' Sara Fischer:

7. Catch up quick: Mueller says aides lied, but not why

"While Mueller has not accused any American of criminally coordinating with Russia, the lies meticulously unspooled by his prosecutors over 20 months have not been mere quibbles," the WashPost points out:

"Trump’s former campaign chairman, deputy campaign manager, former national security adviser, personal lawyer and a campaign foreign policy adviser have all been accused of lying to investigators exploring Russia activity."

"Still, the mounting false statements charges collected by Mueller do not speak to the question of criminal coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia, some analysts noted."

📈 Stat of the weekend ... "Trump and His Associates Had More Than 100 Contacts With Russians Before the Inauguration," per the N.Y. Times, including "in-person meetings, phone calls, text messages, emails and private messages on Twitter."

8. Making climate policy stick

After an absence of nearly a decade, two big climate and energy policies are emerging in the Washington debate, Amy Harder writes in her column, "Harder Line":

The Green New Deal represents the progressive flank of the Democratic Party, but it has no Republican support.

The other, a carbon tax, is bipartisan and reflects controversial compromise.

The need for bipartisan support: While America’s political discourse has gotten more partisan in recent years, actual laws passed by Congress have not, according to forthcoming research by James Curry of the University of Utah and Frances Lee of the University of Maryland.

9. After the overdose

"Twenty years in, the opioid crisis in America has claimed more than 400,000 lives," AP reports in a special package:

"Some 47,600 Americans died of opioid overdoses in 2017. ... That’s more than die as a result of traffic crashes. Opioid deaths were 13 percent higher compared to 2016, up a notch in a 20-year onslaught."

AP National Writer Claire Galofaro, who has covered the opioid crisis for years, spent time with families fighting to go on after losing someone to addiction:

"In an instant, the yearslong cycle of treatment centers, detoxes and jail cells, the late-night phone calls, the holes punched in walls, the nights spent pleading with God, the emptied 401(k)s — it was all over."

"There are hundreds of thousands of families like them, and dozens more made each day."

10. 1 creepy thing

Many colleges, "in an effort to sort through a growing number of applications, are quietly tracking prospective students’ online interaction with the schools," The Wall Street Journal's Douglas Belkin writes (subscription):

Some universities "are tracking how quickly prospective students open email and whether they click links."

"Enrollment officers at institutions including Seton Hall University, Quinnipiac University and Dickinson College know down to the second when prospective students opened an email from the school [and] how long they spent reading it."

Why it matters: "Many students have no idea they are being tracked, or to what extent."